, including family trees of various characters, such as Antigone's
family tree. [Scroll down the "A" page to Antigone and click the java
popup link at the end of her entry.] To find a name, click on the first
letter and scroll down the alphabetical page for that letter.

Walter Englert's page at Reed College is a long scroll that includes a
timeline of Greek drama, origins, staging, theater layout, play structure, and a
bibliography of mostly print sources.

Didaskalia's
study area includes an introduction to ancient theater, a snazzy
reconstruction of the Athenian amphitheater dedicated to Dionysus (click the
picture at left for the large version), a compendium of sites related to ancient
theater, a growing list of reviews of modern productions, and an
"agora"--discussion forums for students, teachers, and researchers on
ancient drama.

Part
(section 5.15.V) of Thomas Martin's overview of ancient Greek history at the
Perseus site includes a
note about women as citizens in Athens, sort of. Each had to have a
male guardian and protector, and each citizen woman had legal protection against
being sold into slavery, for instance.

Assessment: Choose a link and summarize four facts or assertions that
surprise or intrigue you.

This instructional web was made in July, 2002, by Prof. Eric
Hibbison, who is solely responsible for its content.